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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  August 1, 2009 7:00am-10:00am EDT

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o'reilly. hope to see you next time. remember, the spin stops here because we are always looking out for you. >> alysin: good morning everyone. at saturday, august 1 at the august. this is what's happening this hour. we'll can forget the horrible story of virgil buttafuoco. she was shot in the face by amy fisher, her husband spent a number of mary jo joins us live this morning to tell us why she stayed with her husband and wife. she knows he is a sociopath and how you can get out of bad relationships. speak either cash recorders running on empty, until lawmakers vote to reject 2 billion more dollars into the program. so is this just another government bail out? we report you decide. >> clayton: in the cutthroat coffeehouse business and companies are looking for an
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edge in this little stand may have owned it. where is this place chicken article right now. it's bikini coffee are solving this morning comes from john in millersburg, ohio this early in the morning time to climb out of your bunker. watch "fox & friends" before driving in your bunker behind very timely. >> clayton: welcome to "fox & friends" do so this? that's fresh news. we have some good stories, i just put it as i said you guys later, but there's been some great stories we're talking about this morning feeling karl rove is here to talk about the state of the health care reform bill. some are saying it made major progress through committee. at least the house, but others are saying it's a long way from actually succeeding will get a status check this morning. >> clayton: now the recess is happening. speed up something in his health care bills that may surprise you.
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i don't know if you've seen the restaurants. at least here on the east coast that list the calorie count of all of the items on chain restaurants. it could be coming to her restaurant near you, and it really might change the way you eat every morning or afternoon every night, i know it does make will talk about the calorie count coming up. >> clayton: getting your vote on it now because we will talk about it. we will read your e-mails and triggers coming up. do you want to know how many calories are in your life and you're having a starbucks. game cube i do will save most americans do. >> alysin: in the meantime yesterday morning. we were telling you about how the cash recorders, government program or you could bring in your task is wednesday april and traded for a more fuel-efficient vehicle and get $3500 or $4500 back, said it was basically a victim of its own success. it had been so successful in the first for days, they basically put itself out of business. it is the $1 billion the government had allotted for it had almost run out this morning is change somewhat.
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>> clayton: somewhat beside $2 billion of additional money has been approved for this cash recorders program. a lot of people asked where this money come from? some suggest it may come from the tarp found. it came from the energy department loan fund. if you still want to trade in your cooker for $4500 cash. you still have time, we don't know exactly how long this will last. it was expected that the first billion would last at least a couple months at last a couple days. you still have to get in there and do it, but there's an additional $2 billion. >> clayton: people say why couldn't the rest of the bailout is effective? this is the first time by partisan democrats and republicans come together sank this is a huge success and dealerships racing to catch up with us. and that's a much so that cars. the website was processing office crashed, and one car dealership of in boston. the guy who runs three dealerships up there, he said it was like trying to bite. you two tickets in the first five minutes or tickets on sale, because it just crushed the
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whole website. *speaker1 , what i learned from this experience -- is a good incentive. "man that this morning or in because i can't believe how wildly successful this is however. there are critics, commerce and jeff and zooming of texas is a big critic of it. to listen to make us as to speaker. people are hurting in the auto industry. there's no doubt about it, but i would also note that the taxpayers are hurting $80 billion to chrysler and gm in the auto industry -- the auto industry does not have a monopoly on hard times. in this economy. maybe we should have a cash for clockers program and pay people to eat chicken stealing that idea. why not. >> clayton: chick filet would get behind that president obama responding to this yesterday. the white house releasing a statement yesterday our region now.
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>> clayton: let me ask you, then, as a car guy, a family car, i saw some people saying no one is talking about the story, which is that it is killing the used car business speak either this or a certain drawbacks to this. the used lots -- it's not killing them. they're not seeing any benefits from it, but i can see how you can argue that it's killing them. these people have logged on by the thousands and said i was not going to do anything with a car except for this program got me involved. now the problem i have with it isn't why didn't a preapproved people. so we could figure out how big this was government figure out a way to gauge this have the scars preapproved the paperwork done. we would argue not how much money would've gone into it. >> clayton: you're asking a government to be efficient.
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when you touched upon the very thing that people are criticizing, which is it in four days, they can't figure out a program that is fairly manageable, the cash for clockers one, and they wildly miss estimate is that the right word this underestimate -- >> misread steel industry the amount of money it will take. how can i tackle something as monumental as healthcare as many have pointed out. >> clayton: we want you to send us your photos, all morning long, will show your photos of your worst clutter from your history. if you have a photo of it. i don't care what your throne to send it into us, send it to us at friends of foxnews.com with your name and town on it and tell us. model information, whatever sent us the photos will show some of america's worst klunkers robichaux should have no restrictions on these klunkers. like the cash for clockers. it can be anything speak you look at karl rove's clunker coming up behind it was a very
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busy friday in the house on friday. not just healthcare, not just cash for clockers, but another bill brought by barney frank. the democrat from massachusetts, and that is limiting executive pay the cover of the new york post sums it up this way. bonus clause discussion, the outrage. you heard the story earlier in the week nine bailout banks paid out million-dollar bonuses to 4800 employees. these are banks and received bailout money and still have not paid it back. but now they're going to be able to limit the executive pay at these firms. >> clayton: as an example, citigroup. here's what citigroup went through, they took $45 billion of the t.a.r.p. funds. they were involved in the t.a.r.p. funds. they lost 18.7 billion in profits in 2008. they gave 700 employees bonuses of $1 million plus. >> bankamerica took $45 billion
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in t.a.r.p. funds. the net income fell from $14 billion to just $4 billion in 2008 get they gave 172 employees bonuses of $1 million plus. here's the most untouchable thing. we talked about goldman sachs yesterday. they gave out bonuses in the amount of toys with their profits were okay? so they gave out multimillion dollar bonuses, and they made half of that in profits. i'm no mathematician, but i don't think it's a good practice for the more when you add in the factor that could took government taxpayer money. that's a ponzi scheme. basically, rearranging all the funds. >> clayton: this bill wasn't an easy sell necessarily, because it didn't pass 237-185. there were a number of people on both sides of the aisle that went along with this thing. interestingly, though, this covers in this new proposal. this would restrict all of wall street, not just people who received government money. this would restrict anyone beside that is a controversy.
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my friend have no problem restricting the company, that these are companies over $1 billion in assets. as you said almost all of wall street. i can't say that they belonged in that business. >> clayton: let me play devil's advocate on the site, which is card drivers argues in barney frank argues that promotes risky behavior is they're trying to pad his bonuses at the end of the year. by doing risky investments the same stuff that i listen to this problem in the first place, because not you think about it too and let me tell your headlines, major progress has been made on the healthcare reform bill. that's according to a house committee that narrowly approved legislation setting up a big showdown with the rest of the house next month. >> we passed a bill out that shows we can bring together conservative, moderate and progressive democrats were going to need that coalition on the house floor. and i feel confident that we will pass a health care reform bill in the house when we come back in september, due in this
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version of the bill is passed. after this fiscally conservative, blue dogs and the liberal democrats forged a compromise. some of the last-minute changes include capping how much insurers can raise premiums and giving the federal government the authority to negotiate with drug companies by committee democrats and all committee republicans voted against the measure to make an update on those horrible murders of the wealthy florida couple who left behind 17 children. reports have been circulating that the billings murders, vitamin a case of murder for hire. but investigators now say there is no evidence pointing to that of the little rule about it -- completely. they were known for adopting special needs children were killed in home invasion on july 9. eight people have been arrested in that case. if you want a husband, listen up, a safety recall of the drivers airbag in search of honda vehicles is being expanded to include more cars. 440,000 car recall 2000 and 2002
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honda accords 2001 honda civic's in 200-02-0036 is because of a air and the system owner subject to the recall will receive notices over the next few -- months. >> this guy has plenty of muscle from his tires need retired naval ofc. mike ferguson of virginia beach is probably the first seven-year-old model you've ever seen. ferguson is a pastor at a local church is shedding most of his clothing for a charity supporting volunteer rescue squads and ice. eight other senior citizens. not pictured also took part in the photo shoot, steve five alysin has pre-ordered her -- stu and i like a man who serves.
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>> clayton: innuits rocketing up the charts@amazon.com? rod blagojevich his own book is coming out soon. it's already rocketing up on amazon this morning and here it is. here's the cover drop that banner she would be governor, is the title. the governor speaks five. the church behind a political scandal that continues to rock the nation. a couple problems here, if it's the cherette it probably sends them to jail to, does this scandal continue to rock our nation. i haven't heard of this gambling on some. >> clayton: were so rocky couldn't sleep last night. >> dave: it's on amazon, but, in the plight -- the prices are even slashed is not even a out yet and it's been cut in price from 25 bucks 216 c. when his criminal trial has not happened yet. this is clearly a printed strike on his part. he tried to influence the jury pool is going to go on a major publicity blitz. making radio spots, tv spots, so there's nothing anybody who
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hasn't doesn't have some opinion of his history is corruption accusations against him by the time the kernel problems around. >> clayton: excessive better title for this book after it out in the chat room. someone says here today gone tomorrow before the government they spoke into it as well be through if you thought about sinister suggestions for this book. >> alysin: we can get olivia. we will do it in a little while. meanwhile, democrats struck last-minute deal on healthcare, but the timing of already run out according to rick santorum is here to tell us why *speaker7 , who says you can't teach an old dog new church. more from the bass pro shops and a preview of the fall hunting classic. coming up with that set up outside in the plaza "thunder and cracks of lightning."
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i think that you folks have created the deadlines. we haven't. >> this window between now and the august recess will be the make or break. this is the timer we have to get this done. >> dave: congress breaks for the -- august recess. make missing the deadline for health reform. as time passes, it will be a tougher sell, especially with constituents complaining about it once at home. >> clayton: rick santorum is a "fox news" contributor and he joins us now. but my senator to back up monday, clinton good to see you
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guys. >> clayton: let's talk about your home state in my home state of pennsylvania. what happens when the senators go back. casey goes back or present, it goes back to their districts during august recess. are they going to hear anger from their constituents and is unlikely to derail the whole healthcare process. >> yes, they will if he gets actually show up what you will see from a lot of members. i checked the schedule for senator specter and senator casey in pennsylvania yesterday and didn't see any public events were sent for senator casey in the entire month of august and on a couple for senator specter. a lot of the members will hide to be honest with you. they realize the press are showing up at a town meeting and having seniors talk about the provision that you have to counsel them every five years about whether to end her life are not is not going to go over well among the public. so i think they will be very orchestrated events. they're going to try to limit their exposure for bad press. when they go home. speed five if you are a constituent sitting at home in america today. and you want these people to
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hear you what you do is they're trying to hide to this recess gives you. >> what you try to do is you call them out. obviously, anytime there is a public event you want to try to be there. certainly call your congressman and ask when are they going to have a town meeting. in my community? are there any public events due too. that's probably the most important thing you can do right now is find out where your congressman is hiding and try to get in front of them to see if you can convince them what's going on here is not going to be in the best interest of your healthcare. >> clayton: is it as black-and-white as we talk about republican, democrat. i've covered town meetings in pennsylvania, and there's a lot of anger about the healthcare industry. there's a lot of anger about the healthcare process. you want people to fix it. do they see this like a night as we see it. sometimes between republicans and democrats? we just want this thing fixed. sumac, they don't see from an ideological perspective at all. they see problems in the system. they see high cost.
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i'm sure everyone knows people that don't have health insurance coverage, and they would like to see the system improved. but that's not what's going on up here. what's going on up here is a complete overhaul of a system that by and large people are happy with. you have 85% of the people in this country with insurance and about 80% of them are happy with what they have. but that's not what they're trying to fix your what they're trying to do here is really shift from a private-sector health-care economy are working people over to a government run system. >> clayton: former pennsylvania senator, rick santorum, thanks for joining us this morning. >> my pleasure, gentlemen. >> clayton: the senators are franco polish oath. most americans are happy with their coverage. we'll talk to karl rove. >> dave: coming up, who can forget the story of mary jo buttafuoco she was shot in the face by amy fisher, a teenager, her husband was cheating on her with. aaron joe joins us live this morning with why she stayed with her husband for ten more years
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is coming right up.
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♪ ♪ i got troubles, oh ♪ but not today ♪ 'cause they're gonna wash away ♪ ♪ they're gonna wash away ♪ ♪ ♪ they're gonna wash away ♪ this old heart ♪ gonna take them away [ quacks ]
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>> clayton: welcome back here to "fox & friends" this time for your newsletter numbers. first, up $675,000 estimate boston university grad student joel tenenbaum has been ordered to play, record companies for illegally downloading and sharing music. something i've never done. >> next up $90,000. that's how much the company that stage michael jackson's memorial service is donating to a memorial to los angeles police officers killed in the line of duty. >> four dollars, and so much busy world is hiking the price of a one-day ticket. starting sunday it will not cost you $79 per person to get into the theme park.
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alysin? and. >> alysin: everybody probably remembers may of 1992. mary jo buttafuoco answered her front door at her long island home to see 16-year-old amy fisher pointed gone at her face and fire. fischer had been having an affair with mary jo's husband joey, who is more than twice features h. mary jo buttafuoco recklessly survived a close range shot. but she struggled for years as a national spotlight was thrust on the near fatal love triangle. she didn't even know existed before that fischer once dubbed the long island lolita was sentenced to seven years in prison and buttafuoco's husband, joy, about four months for statutory rape. the deal was made into three made-for-tv movies. now in a tell-all book titled "get it through my fix call" mary jo buttafuoco talks about her three decades of turmoil and mary jo joins me live. good morning. good morning. when i love the title of your book, getting it through. i fix call it honestly has a
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double meaning. the shots you took to the head and also how long it took you to figure out who your ex-husband charlie really was, who is he really? >> yet, who is a disco came about as a revelation in a conversation i'm with my son paul pierce about what he said to me loudly that is a sociopath. i couldn't wrap my head around that. so i went and i looked on the internet. i looked it up, and i read sociopathic traits do and what does it mean? >> it means a lot of things. it's a very charming, conniving type of personality that can tell you lack his wife's and to make you believe it. and they are manipulative and adjust have this uncanny ability to woo you and tell you exactly what you want to hear. >> alysin: famous people who are referred to as sociopaths. o.j. simpson, scott peterson went to prison for the murder of his wife through peterson.
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under suspicion for the murders of a couple of lines. how do these creeps, and i think your husband would be included that so many women to stay with them. that's amazing. that's what i always thought a sociopath. i thought it had to end in murder like that and it is just amazing day play on the gullibility of women. i think we as women are nurturing, caring people, and they seem to have an innate sense of that. and they do they make, you need them terribly. >> alysin: through your ordeal he learned a lot of stuff about yourself and about why you are in this relationship for so long for women out there this morning who may be in a relationship with a guy like this. what's your device? >> get out. go run. it's very difficult, if you educate yourself and read these things, you start clicking on the sink. this is my husband. this is my brother. this is my parents, these are toxic people that the life out
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of you. you have to get strong emotionally, physically work on yourself first and then walk away and no matter what they say -- and they will say a lot, promising the moon -- keep on going. guess what they'll find somebody else say when speaking of your ex-husband be restricted joey? >> i did speak to him when i was coming out with a book. i called them up and i said joe. you are a sociopath and this is what happened to our marriage. he laughed at me and said oh. is that my problem ticket and i said yes. and he kind of brushed it off. when the book did get published a month ago i sent him a copy. i signed it and wish you peace. i have no hard feelings is not a joy bashing book. i haven't heard from them since they went we know you are not in a happy long-term relationship with a great guy. you look wonderful in your book is a fascinating read. again getting it through my thick skull, mary jo buttafuoco think you for being here. tonight. thank you so much. >> alysin: coming up.
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there is a new deal that could move the estimated trillion dollars health care plan forward in the house but could stop in the senate. karl rove is here to tell us why. >> first rick is a quick look at the weather stays seven it is really nice here. it is best for shops time alysin and you know what that means there's crazy stuff going on including him and accurate account is getting a little bit. and i think this dog is going to do something fancy. bring an era. bring it here. wwww
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drive welcome back. this is your shot of the morning, this religious habit of a green day concert at msg. a woman named stephanie pulled up on stage to play guitar with the band at the request of lead singer billie joe armstrong. *speaker1 , how cool is that this is my dream come true, except i don't know how to play guitar" on stage beside he was sure she would keep over the band once she asked what key the sun was in the crowd absolutely loved the performance to and i love it on my player guitar does that count billy joe.
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if you. >> clayton: i went to a concert it was like a q. and a concert at the university of pittsburgh. a girl raised her hand and said, can i play on stage a few seats from italian restaurant. she came up with the whole song while he sang. it was like a dream come true statement that testing the. >> clayton: this is something that might get people hot under the collar in new york city and a couple other places. this is popping up, but it may be coming nationwide to a restaurant near you, which is calories on the menu next to your favorite food item. for instance, in the city look at what it looks like you're, if you walked into a starbucks in the city. this is what you're likely to see you are allowed to see this dollar content counter to and can you draw for us. >> clayton: we did drop earlier. it is a caloric content next to it. >> clayton: excel to how many calories is the 520. >> alysin: that's too much.
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i don't know how anybody could object to this personal. it's very graphic. second while the concept has changed my life. it has changed my life. the fact that there are calories on the menu when you walk in it as i used to stumble into a starbucks and the like. o. corn muffin, that sounds healthy. there is a vegetable in that i will get it. 600 calories than i don't get that anymore speech i say they haven't made yesterday, in fact. it was buyers remorse about this coffee i didn't look at the menu can't and i looked up and i was fortified. i ended up not treating the coffee because it was 500 calories. it was not a big fan but she don't think it was normal coffee. >> clayton: this actually keeps you from buying this stuff and we'll have a debate coming up to talk about this because of my dad knew he just went through quadruple bypass surgery. if he knew that getting cheese fries off the menu would lead to problems. perhaps he might not order them all the time spewing critics to say this is big
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brother, this is government having to be a mommy now they tell you what you can eat and can't eat candidly any personal responsibility here. >> clayton: on the same side of that, look at this. people don't know this and it cost $147 billion we spend on a pc related conditions in the country. 10% of all medical spending across the board. just take a look at how much one person pays if they are obese. beside $3400 per year on average, unless you of course, you talk about obese americans. the price goes up, $1400 per year spent on healthcare, but the question do you folks is. you want to know the calories that are in your favorite items. this only applies to chain restaurants. only the big chains, not the local mom-and-pop coffee shops or restaurants, but it will change your life. do you want this change? to want, it may yet carry him. see five it's buzz kill to hear your headlines. three american hikers are under arrest after crossing into iran. they were hiking in iraq's
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kurdish region in the apparently crossed the border by accident. they were soon arrested a regular facials identify them is sean gabriel maxwell shane power and serve short. >> meanwhile, iran is putting election protesters and opposition protesters on trial today. they are accused of rioting. >> a warning in the philippines after the death of loved former president aquino. she is viewed across the world as an icon of democracy. in 1986, she led an uprising that ended the 20 year dictatorship of ferdinand marcos. she also fought off seven coup attempts, aquino had been suffering from: cancer. she was 76 years old. >> we're learning the wife of a ponzi scheme or bernie made a post on the same a lot of money. court papers show ruth made up those $600,000 in tax penalties and interest and may offer to pay off its good and new spending agreement allows her to spend money only on her tax and
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legal bills, as well as a reasonable amount on living expenses. that's not new -- that's not. >> controversy brewing in a new california espresso director. why did you well, check out the bikini clad priestess. not surprisingly, a lot more men than women are visiting the shop *speaker3 , they like the sugar-free life is. sales have really taken off. >> where two blocks from the beach. so basically we're bringing them each closer to the people. soon, i find the hot coffee habit -- the kiddies do not mix cement bikinis are big part of the business plan. because of the coffee is okay. >> clayton: that's a sidebar issue, sue and tell us about sports c-5, they say you can't go home again ... i too michael vick. kennedy organizes them mix on some of newport news, say welcome home event is scheduled for next saturday. that will be in attendance, and he will be celebrated, is
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scheduled to speak about gang violence this as rumors continue to swirl that perhaps the new england patriots. i'd be interested in signing vick as tom brady's backup. bill bilichick can reform the best of them. >> some major-league trades at the baseball trading deadline to cut about retirement, all-star catcher victor martinez got traded into a penant race is headed to my boston red sox. meanwhile, that man jake peavy, a former cy young award-winning pitcher says yes to the team, he said no to a few months ago, martinez shipped from the indians to the red sox getting those from san diego to the contending chicago white sox to be the biggest story is right holiday. one of the best pitchers in the game not traded from the throttle blue jays. he is staying put, that is your headlines. >> clayton: and quickly the philadelphia phillies big outing last night complete game. >> dave: complete-game four-hitter looks good speaker
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list are correct. a ricky c7 hey baby oil, is that coffee drink that had 500 calories. that was just her coffee beside it wasn't a regular coffee. it was a mockup, but that's fairly normal for me. >> clayton: rick is always caring ones with the whipped cream in the morning. c-17 crazy? >> clayton: of the big ice coffee and seven i started that's it, you know. they look at the weather. here are your temperatures as you wake up a much better morning across the northeast. in fact is not that soupy humid air that we had yesterday. today is better will so have cool air across the northern plains is again still warm and muggy to the south. looking at the satellite radar picture. one system, we brought all that rain showers across onto the east yesterday is gone. the tail end of that front will fire some storms down across parts of the southeast once again, but the next front you can see moving and across areas of wisconsin, stretched out towards parts of missouri. that will be the focus today in
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the southern end of it will bring us some severe weather later on this afternoon. especially across parts of oklahoma and arkansas, and maybe across western tennessee. areas of memphis that were ravaged a couple days ago across the west bank in a nice and not as hot today at in seattle after this brutal week for david. temperatures will be back in towards the 80s. we sent it over to you. >> alysin: thanks rick. i have a lot going on hear at my friend ali done back from bass pro shops to hand me a gun, which is always dangerous at this hour in the morning. i see you brought a lot of stuff here including a grizzly bear. what's going on. >> i love to hunt. i look forward to this time of year every year, because breast -- bass pro pulls out all the stops this is their fall hunting classic. it's the greatest hunting sale, you will find anywhere. so many things going on *speaker1 , show me some items in addition to this gun. *custom , we have our multi-camera here, which is really cool and has a 45-foot flash and it's a game camera and you can basically take pictures
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at your theater or food plot or whatever spewing this is after they kill. >> now come you put over a food plot. or put on a tree stand to see what's coming before you go hunting through and that's good because i might need a shot of whatever i tag. >> to put that on your rifle through and i just looked through it. tonight, we have 10,000 items was going on at bass pro shops right now is. we have 51 stores all around the country. this weekend there will be 100 girls at all these bass pro stores, conducting seminars on hunting, shooting, fishing game calling and it's all free and is just so many things going on at the stores. 10,000 items on sale soon, what do i need to know about hunting except stand back everyone. >> this is the real god began heard anything with this. it's a crock, but the most important thing is to look good
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and you look pretty good right now. so. i thank you. i appreciate the tip. so what else is there but it was need to know. >> all the things going on at the bass pro stores. the fall hunting classic is huge for help desk wrote next-generation weekend for the kids. and basically what it is is they come in there all these activities, as a shooting gallery paintball cage seminars all kinds of stuff going on. the next generation of the other person. all this stuff is free to go to bass pro shops. there are all these things going on at the store. you can get it done in two days. it will be fun trying to have school. >> showman-like. you're holding a pretty good. >> alysin: up against my shoulder to when i got it into the camera to make it look like a pro soon. thank you. i think i just hit it, lets go
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back into clayton at nine. >> clayton: get the cops out there right now. thanks alysin she is outside this window, which is all approved lesson is when the on the show because of his top domestic priority of his president obama using the politics of fear to move healthcare reform forward. karl rove says yes, and he will explain areas. at least, even if the outside of the gun. (announcer) crest whitestrips has created a revolutionary strip... it sticks to your teeth so well... you can even drink water with it on.
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>> clayton: welcome back to "fox & friends". during the campaign. president, obama promised to end the politics of fear. our next guest says he is using fear to sell his healthcare proposal. karl rove joins us to talk about it. good morning, karl. you have is audio? i'm going to set this up. we will get the karl rove in a
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second during the campaign then candidate obama said the bush administration used the politics of fear, and he specifically was pointing to the war on terror a protracted war onto her and using that to drum up support for this war. he said the bush administration was using those politics. in a new op-ed piece you point out, the president is using the same tactics to sell healthcare. why do you say that? >> early on he talked about healthcare as a problem involving the uninsured. we need to ensure people who do not have health care coverage. starting two weeks ago he began to attack people and began to attack things. he talked about how americans have a fear of losing their healthcare and a fear of rising premiums. he began to talk about insurance companies and the villains in this drama. in fact nancy pelosi this week called on the amoral villains. in his nationally televised news conference, he began to attack healthcare professionals, saying
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doctors routinely give you the red pill was twice as expensive as the equally effective. the pill and they were ripping the thousands of children who didn't need tonsillectomy is busy wanted to fatten their wallets. those things would have gotten more attention if it would not have been about his comment about the police acted stupidly in the gates manner. there is a definite change from, there is an unmet need to there are villains who need to be taken care of. they have done polling and they found as their healthcare proposal has some good people's estimation. and as they look for, what a turnaround, they have seized upon making insurance companies the villains as there poster outlined in a speech in front of about four weeks ago. >> clayton: butts look at the map here is the melee. we hear a lot of stories about how people need their healthcare coverage. fixed. they need this fixed, but proof might be in the map. the here. a 4% say they are happy with their coverage. 91% have insurance. so 76 won't want their current
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coverage threatened at all. these numbers seem to say that people are not as fearful about healthcare as the president might lead us to believe. *custom , i think that's right. i put them in a column. i also have some other numbers we need to look at. there are 307 million americans. there are 47 million people who don't have health insurance. 20% of those are our illegals. i'm not sure the american taxpayer wants to spend money covering the illegal alien health insurance. 40% of those are people who make $50,000 or more per year. in fact, $75,000 more per year, they can afford health insurance. just under 30% are people who are eligible for existing government programs like medicare or as chip. that means about 10% of that 47 million, roughly 5,000,000 people are the people we're trying to get covered and that's 2% of the american population. should we be radically changing all healthcare in order to take care of roughly 2% of the american population. or should we be focused like a laser beam on a system that
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would help meet their needs rather than discombobulating everybody. particularly people who are comfortable with what they have got. >> clayton: nice handwriting by the way. >> thank you, awfully nice of you. >> clayton: i saw a piece in the last few weeks. that said, the democrats have failed to find a villain. the way to sell healthcare is to find a villain. you point out the fear -- the politics of fear is that what the democrats are doing here. ?, they finally found a villain? snake. i think they're in stage was let sell this as meaning an unmet need too. that didn't work when people saw a drawing dollar price tag or a chilean fiber chileans express to cover this other deep cuts in medicare, remember this depends on having $400 million worth of cuts in medicare, and involves $500 billion plus in tax increases, they talked about even taxing soda pop, when people started to hear these details, they said, well wait a minute, i don't like this and
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support for the plan plummeted. at that point, i think democrats said let's go back to the old playbook and start attacking somebody. and in this instance, they decided to attack the 1300 companies in america that provide healthcare insurance and they try to make them the villains. >> clayton: stand by carlie breaking news, but we want you to comment on some of alison's farm outside of the gun. when we come back let's first doesn't alysin with breaking news through when we do have a breaking story, because it terminal at new york's laguardia airport has just been evacuated a lot of details ahead for you on why that's happening. >> $2 billion spent by the democrats giving cash for klunkers, a little more fuel. is it worth it to cute little ask karl rove, and we will hear about the worst clunker he's ever driven. next. mom vo: i can't start the first grade with her.
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mom vo: i can't hold her hand on the bus. mom vo: or be there to show everyone how great she is. mom vo: but what i can do is give her everything she needs to be excited for school, while staying in my budget. mom: that's why i go to walmart. mom vo: she has everything she needs. and then some. anncr vo: get them everything they need to succeed
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>> the biggest problems we face right now has to do with george bush trying to bring more power into the executive branch and not go through congress at all. and that's what i intend to reverse. when i'm president of united states of america do and that was president obama during the campaign last year i missing to reduce the power of the executive branch has a president gone back on his promise by appointing 32 starts to cute house minority leader, eric cantor, republican from virginia said one former senior adviser to george w. bush and "fox news" contributor karl rove joins us now. meghan lanning alysin, how are you? to and i am well. are these sars circumventing
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congress? >> in some instances absolutely is. there are three problems with these sars. there are some people designated as czars who are clearly acting in the stead of people who are as possible to report for congress. for example, the chairman of the council of environmental quality. the presidents council of environment, equality is subject to senate confirmation and can be called by commerce to testify. i having a climate czar, who in essence is doing the job of the ceq chief, that congress does not have the ability to call that person find out what they're up too. the second problem is, where did the authority come for some of these things? and where does the car started his authority to the firing of president of gm? i'm not certain there's any legislative authority to do that, because as the cars are resigned to equities then replaced the five there were 12 czars in the bush administration
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so how has this changed ?, what we need to do to get this under control. >> every administration will have. they designate for a certain. of time to undertake a certain set of activities. the question is, how much of this to do and how transparent is it? residents. we have someone in charge of katrina and the aftermath of katrina. the country that aided by the don powell is subject to congress and could be called by congress and had to report there. so you have to be careful. it's a question of how transparent and are the actually in charge of running something. there's wanting to say look, we have someone in charge of developing an administration policy on this kind of area, is entirely appropriate and should not be called azar, and someone who is in charge of something like the cars are. the cars are resigned but he was replaced. there's also a very practical question here, which is the loss is the white house has a budget. how do they pay for these people to cute. they pay for these people by putting them on the payroll in
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some instances of other agencies and departments. but there are legal limits on how much they can pay them for how long. >> clayton: or they pay them like the new cash for klunkers program to one catch for czars. >> clayton: is time for rove. unplugged. roll the animation. here is a highlight of the day, i want to get this now. we know everyone is turning in their klunkers. we asked america to send in their pictures of their worst klunkers morning. karl rove, tell us what is the worst clunker you ever had to cute. >> first of all i only bought one new car in my life. i bought it in 2001. please don't call it old car or used car of clunker. that's discriminatory. but i bought an old like 1970s mercedes-benz diesel station wagon. that's it right there. it had about 350,000 miles on it. i bought it for six grand. >> alysin: that's beautiful, karl. >> i was filing the five-year clunker was a mercedes.
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it must be rubbed. >> about for six grand my friend underwood for $100,000 a month. it had 460,000 miles and i sold it for three grand after six years. there was a white whale. soon all my goodness, that is great. thank you for sharing that with us. we will share some of our worst. >> housenet have a word with you? i am a hunter. i'm a hunter and i want to give you a point. you keep that there'll up. even if the weapon is unloaded. david don't like the springett around. keep that there'll up. >> alysin: i'm sorry slow down. the tabarra up. i've got it. so it's good that there'll is. earlier you were just laying around. the five there it is right there. there is the problem. >> that's dangerous. because she's taking notes due on our member that.
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>> clayton: is president dick cheney will be coming up later for some gun usage advocates. >> that was my lawyer, he shot. >> clayton: have a great weekend. it's always a pleasure speed, but just ahead against us out an entire family. but my possible new cure for. can you believe that? to help scoop every parent needs to know about stopping her baby from crying endlessly. that's coming up.. gear to get it done at bass save on the gear to get it done at bass pro shops. like redhead canvas utility shorts for only $12.94. the body glove method life vest for only $19.94. you all want to run your businesses more efficiently, so we've brought in a team of experts to help.
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to undermining everyone happy august, it is saturday, august august 1. at this hour, a breaking news story at a terminal at new york's laguardia airport. the terminal is evacuated, we have the details ahead. >> dave: cash for klunkers has not yet reached the end of the road. another $2 billion of taxpayer money be spent on this program area, are we bailing out the auto industry again and again and again? >> clayton: and again. here's a story you won't believe. that's a car chase like you've never seen before. behind the wheel a seven-year-old kid. even crazier, the reason he is on the run from the law. our slogan is mourning comes from mark foxandfriends.com should be curvy, but the news is straight. through a nice area. >> you're watching the number one morning show on cable, "fox
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& friends". *speaker3 . thank you, clayton. see five clayton morris. good morning good saturday morning to all of you. one thing the three of us love to do is we have this job, his nap. there's a new state out that says -- decorator on the couch at 945. or it, but there's a new study that says a stunning amount of americans that every day. we give you the exact breakdown for naps and most, why then have the most benefits. >> alysin: a third of all americans are napping. >> dave: i was going to tease that part. i was going to leave it to what i can't believe that number that people do everyday. >> clayton: we're talking about cash for klunkers. you are sending in wonderful pictures. we will show you which were sending in. so the photo of carl's per se, the station wagon. >> dave: karl rove's clunker was
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a versace. a lot he did have it for 100,000 miles. she wanted to call it the white whale. >> clayton: did you ever watch fawlty towers, the british show. like something he would drive on his way to get us going every morning. when we want to talk to you about this cash for klunkers program. yesterday it seemed to be a victim of its own success. that was out of money the government said after just four days because somebody people have brought their gas guzzlers into a dealership to trade it for a more fuel-efficient car, and to get the $3500, up to $4500 cash rebate. now the house is rushed through a plan to provide 2 billion more, but dollars was the first william s. cohen. however, there are sticking points in the senate. this is not a done deal this morning. the house supports it, but there are at least five senators have expressed opposition to this entire program. so it may not actually get more money see. there is other opposition. let's listen to congressman hanssen of and. >> the auto industry does not
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have a monopoly on hard times. in this economy. recently, one of the largest poultry producers in america, pilgrim's pride. just a few miles outside of my congressional district. they had to declare chapter 11. maybe we should have a cash for klunkers program and pay people to eat chicken. >> clayton: pay me to eat chicken to buy this program again has been a tremendous success. will it help those that are intended to help? would help chrysler and gm? there is question about that this morning as they make mostly suvs, pickup trucks, and those are not what people are trading and four it is likely to help the foreign imports. >> is customary. this proves the government cannot do anything. people cancel deals, so we must sail's that she works up for dealership -- there's a lot of misinformation out there.
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people don't like how it was run just this week and this is a small program. face, it is not a mammoth program health care would be. >> clayton: john burris trying to direct hit of 1971. amc gremlin for 200 bucks so that one year later for 160 bucks. samantha is a photo of her clunker look at this samantha from mississippi. did you steal a top car and you're trying to traded for money? speak five i would go out and say she bought that from the police department i could be wrong. david from tennessee. >> alysin: that's a clunker. >> dave: i think you need to be able to start the vehicle. states are like this one. brian from georgia, would you call that mud -- >> dave: i call that a monster truck and it needs air in the tires. that is utterly a clunker. >> alysin: is a good klunkers beef. three is the parking in front yard? speak i've keep them coming. we asked this morning for better
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title for governor of the good that such coming book. it's on amazon of arctic/the price even though it's not yet out. the title sounds too boring to us, because this guy is such an intriguing figure in the title simply says the governor the truth behind the political scandal that continues to rock the nation. even know does not continue to rock the nation ceiling is such a egomaniac. the scandal trucks, the nation. i know you love sleepover last night. here are some sense suggestions i had because i think what he should say. you should write a book and should be sort of a how-to book. i thought they could place games for dummies. >> clayton: like that. >> dave: that's good. i like that of the how-to. >> clayton: checking amazon it's available in september, september 8. pitcher pre-orders and many of you will be for 2495 its target/to 16 bucks. its 352 pages and eight at six
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figures to write the book. the service of the story. he got a book advance to write this thing of course is all comes before the -- before his girdle trial. soon, i believe he's doing this as a way to taint the jury pool is getting a story out there. if i were straight to profit from his demise before he goes to jail. his lunch from james, i didn't mind leaving way, see-through we got one from some people here today gone tomorrow. there's a good photo that should have been a cover of the book fundamentally or headlines for you within onto "fox news" alert, a central terminal building at laguardia airport in new york city has been evacuated at this hour. this is a person is in police custody for possession of a suspicious package. the arrest happened at an american airlines terminal. the suspect was checking his or her bag at the time of the arrest will bring you more details as they become
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available, including what is in a suspicious bag. >> wall street bankers could see their paper down the house voted to put limits on wall street bonuses. under the plan excess of pay packages that would encourage major risks would be prohibited. this only affects firms with more than a windows in assets. this news comes a day after night of the nations used banks doled out millions and millions of dollars in bonuses. even though they are receiving federal bailout money. the bill faces an uncertain future in the senate. >> three months after the white house released a photo taken during a photo op of air force one flight over new york, more photos were released yesterday including this one. they fly over your member caused panic on the streets of new york below, because the planes were flying so low. the obama administration later apologized for the incident. that's a pretty dramatic photos are shellacking inner-city kids kicked out of a suburban philadelphia swim club to the treat of a lifetime there
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visiting disney world with movie star tyler perry. paid for the entire trip, he said the story about the kids being kicked out of a pool because of racism, broke his heart. the justice department currently investigating the pool for civil rights violations. that is a silver lining on that story. those are your headlines speak of nobody likes to not like me. just ask my wife. when i came across a study earlier in the week i was stunned. a pew research study found that over one third of our country maps on a daily basis. in fact, 34% of americans that every day. they have to be counting kids. >> clayton: two just wake of defeat and go back to sleep. i love imap. i never used to nap until i started working in morning television, which for now is like ten years. i used to be a night person and i would never nap at my dad never naps. that's not in our family to do so. the doctors found one of the
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best things you can possibly do for your body is to take a 20 minute to one hour nap every day. recharge around 2:00 pm or 3:00 pm in afternoon like a siesta speaker, they said 20-30 minutes, i don't know about our. you are out for an hour like a dead carp. look at the people must have. then over 50 are taking a lot of naps speak by 41% and that. >> alysin: women over 80, they are entitled to nap. depressed people. if i depressed people? suing you have less energy, your unhappy. >> clayton: might be laughing about the people who nap, it turns out some of the most intelligent people in world history or nappers. i thought people at the highest intelligence of our nappers. albert einstein, winston churchill, thomas edison, resident reagan, president clinton, they were all peppers and have very high iq points
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those people. >> dave: there are economic factors here. those making less than $30,000 a year, 42% of them that. i'm not sure what rick reichmuth falls on the survey. rick, do not? >> i work i make under 40,000 a year. i'm a huge nap or. soon all mr. make fun of me for napping c-17 after the gym. >> clayton: re: where these guys, in afternoon it's hard with the blackout should be put on a mask. c7. i'm from arizona. there is much like to get used to sleeping with light. i think says it's good for, you get unhappy people map? is that counterintuitive to give this should be happy if it's good for you, see-through, they say never do a job interview at 2:00 pm. that's when bosses are at their worst. a low energy levels, he should take in that sue and we should take a national nap today. who's with me. steve i were going to nap while you do the weather. c-17 at why do the weather every
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time. >> clayton: make a some wonder. >> rick: i would love too. regular rates moved to the northeast yesterday, and across eastern seed or. a font is gone. a beautiful day in its wake. enjoy your day tomorrow, not so nice because the next system was in and we will see rain showers and understood you. in its wake, we have humid conditions patchy fog across parts of new york, and towards kentucky and across parts of alabama. we have -- across the central plains the next front is moving in with us. he showers here today at nothing that bad, but the southern tip of this will bring more significant rain. maybe 2-3 inches, and we will talk about localized flooding and maybe an isolated tornado once again. here are your temperatures for the day. here's the cool pocket that continues in parts of minnesota and wisconsin. everywhere else across east nevada. even toward seattle this week he hit 100 through your all-time temperature.
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rebecca 91. till above average but nowhere were used to be. wake up guys. fellow siva that wasn't long enough to want what to do speak ip do a 20 minute weather segment to get. *speaker3 . thank you, rick. that's right. coming up on the show, democrats have a brand-new strategy to best healthcare reform. when the insurance industry. do they really need a bad guide to solar cause? >> dave: take a look m&ms and call me in the morning. it turns out these kind of chocolates that melt in your mouth. good cure browses. what are the world is going on hear. we tell you a medical rewind to honey nut green m&m skier? (announcer) big news for stiff joint sufferers. to improve joint comfort in as little as six days. six days, that's fast! (announcer) joint supplement pills are history,
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is should great big tears about, it turns industry. there is no business in america makes more money than the insurance industry over the last ten years there profits have been for hundreds or 2%. so i'm not really in a very much in the mood to worry about the insurance industry. the five harry reid on the warpath against insurance companies in an attempt to garner support for the healthcare plan. but just how accurate is he really being there. we found that the profits from the top ten companies actually dropped in fact, by almost 1/3 from 2007-2008.
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to help us sort this out as governor mike huckabee, host of huckabee here on fox news channel. >> mike: good morning. >> dave: the polls were not going well become the enemy. it is the insurance industry, who does make a lot of money, but they are not the enemy are they? spee10, they are not the enemy. the fact is that defined a demon. george w. bush was the demon for a while and that got old. they tried to blame the republicans. then someone reminded them they have majorities in the house and senate. it wasn't the republicans fault. so they said let's go to the insurance companies. i'm not here to defend the insurance companies, but i'm not going to attack them. here's the point. ensures copies are a business. they are in business to make money. and if they don't make money, they go out of business and people don't have insurance. so the thing we need to remember, i sat down with a group of insurance ceos a few years ago and am what you do more to fix preventive care. you know why?
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because insurance industry is hampered by federal rules regarding how we do insurance. insurance is tied to your employer, not you. if you are personally the owner of that policy rather than your at the u. keep it hear your lifetime. the average american changes jobs every seven years, which means you change insurance companies. the money to be saved and prevention care is long-term. so if the insurance companies provide your insurance now, chances are, you are covered by another carrier. they're making money for their competitor, not you. here's how you fix it. you fix it by making you the owner of your policies, not your employer, and your policy is portable. when you move, so does your policy defined that something they have discussed. nancy pelosi says about the insurance industry, they are the villains in all this. she goes on to say it's almost a moral. even as he went out there trying to make money. spee10, you know who is a moral? congress. brought here by the morale of the? of all people to be talking about how immoral it is to waste
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money. it's the congress of the united states, who has reached deep into the pockets of the american taxpayer, taken every last time and thrown it away and told our children have to pay for it. that's about to be at fault. >> dave: we are all most of the time, but these are the democrats, the blue dog democrats who have actually been the biggest obstacle here, that they're blaming the insurance industry. should they be clear about the problem here? >> mike: they should be clear. if the democrats want to do something they can do it. they're afraid to do it because they know 86% of the american people are satisfied with their health insurance. they don't begrudge somebody else getting it, but they don't want them to get it at the expense of their own coverage is what we're all afraid to see happen behind nearly 70% of people are afraid this will hurt the quality of their health care. much more coming up with the governor. catcher clockers get another 2 billion bucks. and you of course footing the bill. didn't we already dealt the auto industry? governor huckabee sticks around.
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>> plus a 45 mph car chase started by a seven-year-old kid. all because he didn't want to go to sunday service. where did you learn how to drive like that? is here, we'll ask him that question. straight ahead. xx; [ bottle #1 ] oh hey, hey...
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funding for this program. what's the best way to proceed to q. we're back with governor huckabee.jxñ?ñ?ñ >> mike: good morning. >> clayton: $2 billion. the senate still needs to sign off on this thing talking about a bipartisan agreement here. is this the right way to proceed? throw $2 billion at this thing? >> mike: i'm happy for the car dealers. is it the responsibility of american taxpayers and specifically car owners to buy cars for their neighbors. that's what we need to remember. this is not just free money. there's no such thing as free money. the money came from the taxpayers and the government reallocated. i love musical instruments. i wish every kid in american be america have one. but my targets to do. the question is, should we have a payola for cannellis or where we stop here soon, but this is some say better than going to
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just these big banks. we have bailed out the big banks, build up a big auto makers to the tune of millions of dollars. at least this is going into the pockets of someone. >> mike: here's a novel idea. rather than the government deciding which industry wins in which one loses, another tax break to everybody? put the money back in the hands of the people who earned it. just a tax holiday. one week no payroll tax. one week no payroll tax. every american worker has funny in his or her pocket. it requires no accounting, there's no paperwork or did the government can fill out the paperwork on the stuff. >> dave: it's over 100 pages long. governor huckabee has a truck from 1995 with 200,000 miles on it. >> mike: it still works like a chart. it's a great tow truck speed by my problem with this and hate to get back to healthcare, but if you misread this, if you misread the economy as joe biden said, what stops you from mistreating
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healthcare, and god forbid, what happens if you misread that one. that would be devastating for our economy, if you have to go back for transport and you misread that. >> mike: before you make a recipe and feed 600 people, don't you make a test batch and feet sex? don't you do that? what you do is you take these ideas that ours salt really change dramatic and you test them in three or four states. if they worked then apply them to the rest of the states. you do not apply than 250 states and transform the health-care system. when in fact, what you may do is destroy it *speaker3 . maybe they didn't know as dave said measuring this thing. senator jim dement republican from south carolina, said he planned to filibuster this catcher clockers program. but he decided against it when he saw the popularity of the bill. which is pretty shocking. sunnis, that is laughable when washington program was broken a couple days
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i think he just parroted what you said, governor *speaker5 , that sounds familiar. >> mike: put the hands of the -- put money back in the hands of the people that heard it in the first place. let's mock companies keep it for a week or month back a day, that's money that is not the governments to start with. it is money that's instantly in the economy and the real issue is that the consumers of america spend it where they want to spend it not for the government wants them to spend it. why does the government get to pick where we spend our money. that's what we need to ask, and we're not getting answers to that. >> clayton: we need to watch her show tonight 8:00 pm on fox news channel. >> mike: you better watch it, by golly. >> clayton: we asked americans to send them photos of their klunkers stewer just photos please. >> dave: we don't have 4500 bucks to give you.
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>> clayton: friends at foxnews.com is where you send your photo. g-5 governor, guess that 95 silverado pickup. >> coming up, democrats sent a brand-new deal that could move the estimated trillion dollar health care program for it in house. we're live from washington with the latest details. here's rick with a quick look at the weather outside c-17 beautiful weekend. at least the start of the weekend across the eastern part of the country. some problems in the center part of the company. it is also bass pro shops time for their fall hunting classic. get out and plan to hunt for something i see an alligator over there. maybe a python in florida that should be helpful. we'll be right back. stay with us
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>> clayton: welcome back of "fox & friends" from video. that's the right video second shot of a morning unless you're holding a child. and come watch this video. it's a tradition is more than 700 years old. gobbing infants from the roof of a mosque in india. >> alysin: line? >> clayton: hundreds of babies under the age of two or shaken in the air like that for being dropped off the roof of the b merger got the shrine in western india. despite protests from child's local officials say there are no reports of injuries.
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steve i would never got to the why. there are 5w's in the news story >> clayton: brings good luck to the child for the rest of their life. she won that one doesn't look like he feels he is lucky speak either need therapy to rest of their lives. >> clayton: the best part is you grow up, you don't know you got dropped off a roof. a jimmy, when you're just a baby we dropped you off the roof of "fox news" building out here beside that's not healthy. let's talk health care reform. it takes a huge step forward on friday. the house fortunate last-minute compromise. joining us from washington is caroline shively. caroline, this book came in very late. a long busy day in the house, right? >> right, the vote did not come down until after 10:00 o'clock. the house commerce committee voted out 31-28 every republican on the panel voted against it as did five democrats. not just be reconciled with two other committee versions which are much more liberal in the
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full house should vote sometime next month. on the senate side they're on a much slower track. a key committee there will vote on it until mid-september. the suppresant wanted both the house and senate to vote before they went on vacation, but that did not happen soon help us understand what this person of the bill actually includes. >> that does a lot. it's pretty sweeping. for one thing if you want a policy, health insurance companies want to sell it to you. they could not exclude people for pre-existing conditions. it would provide subsidies for low-income families. as a government run insurance option in there. as for the cost is more than one try in dollars over ten years, paid for by new taxes on the wealthy and businesses, plus cuts for medicare and medicaid. the democrats who back it said. covering millions would know insurance now and slowing the growth of healthcare costs. republicans said millions of americans without health insurance from their employers would be dumped into this government run option. it also expands medicare
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coverage, but asked the money speaker list change topics. we understand the white house garden, we know michelle obama wanted this white house garden set up. she wanted to make an organic garden. it turns out, there is a hiccup in the obama's plan to make this organic garden. what can the world happened to the obama garden. too cute. >> or this summer the national park service tested the dirt below the garden and found it has elevated levels of lead. not so high as a threat to humans, but the reason is the clinton-gore 19 used sewage sludge for fertilizer. that's actually a common practice. but it means anything people poured on entrance could get into that source lunch. because that was used, technically the garden cannot be classified as organic. *speaker3 , so they have this toxicity in the garden, and they can't actually certified organic. thanks to the clintons. i love this. >> dave: thanks to caroline, we now know the truth about that
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sludge. i have seen michelle obama on camera say they are going to serve those vegetables to state officials. >> clayton: that's the thing to do is just organic. >> dave: would you eat them? *speaker1 's best not to talk to much about where your food came from. >> clayton: the white house associate shots of the garden has produced lettuce snap beans, peas and colored and you can hear your majesty. here you go, collared greens grown in sewage. scott, let me serve your news headlines for you. former president george bush making a second speech in asia since leaving office. the former president spoke to a group of south korean business leaders about the economy, and north korea's nuclear capabilities. president bush said the u.s. and south korea must stand firm against mark koreas continued defiance. and in a letter about the former president jokiness recovered to air force one that not all the name-calling that goes along with politics.
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>> a 30-year-old murder mystery have been solved thanks to dna testing was constantly say dna evidence links 76-year-old edward wayne edwards to the double murder of two high school sweethearts in 1980. detectives collected his skin in connection with the murders in 19 growth in the hat and killing true. the couple disappeared after wedding reception, but their bodies were found later. let's hope that cold case is solved. cannot imagine wearing the same underwear for months. speaking that's what i do anyway soon as the japanese astronaut co-chief account that just it. he said it was all part of an experiment. it was just sheer laziness, like clinton, he wanted to prove you don't need much luggage and space. he says, the odor eating bacteria killing space under really worked. he returned to earth on a space shuttle endeavour after months on the international space station. maybe we should get used sewage
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on this. >> dave: he just doesn't like to do his laundry. speechwriters don't wear underwear, speak let's talk sports. people on one end and a golf course will be shooting for more than power. the city council in the town of rochester has approved a plan to about geese hunting on the round barn golf course. the club said that as many as 1000 canadian geese spend the winter there, damaging the church at umass. are you will this goose hunt on a golf course starts to resemble the finale of getting shaq, do you think? soulias, shooting birdies on a whole new meaning. flickinger golf bag you think 9-iron, or 12gauge. tough call, but you can hunt on a golf course in indiana. if you have hunted on this golf
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course, let us know. >> clayton: in pennsylvania there are golf courses there might catch us in sure enough in the wintertime. the canadian geese landed suing canada geese don't feel like handling the hundreds of e-mails that will come in. if i canada geese. they're not canadian. >> alysin: bare canada geese. you mention caddy shack. >> clayton: the national and the other for the arts. a lot of good stuff. they really do. they fund the arts in this country. there is controversy about what they should be funding, but we need arts in this country, but should stimulus funds go to funding some of what the national endowment for the arts is funding, which are questionable materials that include simulated sex dances. i'm a basically porn in a way. is that safe to say? >> dave: $80 million. $80 million of our estimate is money going to the nba and some
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of this is funding things like pornographic horror films in san francisco. want an example unfortunately, i have one. it's called thunder crack. the world's only underground, kinky art form horror film. this is complete with four men, three women and a girl. i have no more to say about that. >> clayton: assist thunderclap? suren. there's also a dance truth-in-sentencing school called symmetry project. it is two people running around naked on the floor. performance to some part of others. $25,000 goes to a long-running pansexual performance. whatever that means. that says join your fellow perks for some explicit twisted fun. here's the point. some of the same san francisco performance art houses were also funded during the bush administration in 2007. the nea also funneled through them to these san francisco
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shows. but this year, in 2009 with the economic climate as it is, is it still appropriate? odyssey, frugality is an quality is out. is it still appropriate to send $50,000 to thunder crack when you could be filling potholes. they sound similar, potholes under crack, they're very different. >> clayton: the nea says this. our review process is very comprehensive --. apparently they're spending a lot of time reading programs like thunder crack to make sure that it needs the funding. soon i'm picking up which are putting them speak that i think i can put the combustion this program. >> clayton: this has happened over the last couple of years. both administrations responsible for funding the programs, anonymous current economic climate, is it perhaps time to pull the plug on programs like this? you be the judge of that is not. >> dave: lets get to wreck the
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71 man's trash is an administrator. hey, you're always looking for outdoor space from the deca new york? red? how about this? it's bass pro shops fall classic, guys. you may think you need is for hunting, but you can find a few uses for this in new york city as well. see if i like what? >> rick: how about little barbecue appear. blue canvas or something is actually nice appear. it's a little breezier than it is about 25 feet down from, which is very nice. a beautiful day across the northeast after the really rough day yesterday. it has been such a rough summer for some people with storms. the pattern we are in will continue meeting for rain showers tomorrow, have to join when you can hear are your temperatures as you wake up.
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pretty cool across parts of the iraqis once again, but we do have a couple things going on. the satellite radar picture shows one system that moved off the east coast, bringing showers now the tail end of the front across parts of the southeast seven areas of georgia, alabama and mississippi are you. there's another pertinent across areas of wisconsin stretching down to missouri and oklahoma and throughout the afternoon we will see severe weather fire across parts of oklahoma enter its arkansas and louisiana. across the west, things look fine, once again, or it very clear skies. we will see after thunderstorms. the big story was the heatwave in the pacific northwest. looking at the churches today, still warm, still above average toward seattle, but nothing near that 103 that we saw this week and all-time high. it broke the record, the prior record was under 100°. probably one of the few degrees again, but we will not get anywhere near those kinds of guys.
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still brutally warm across the southwest. phoenix for the dates marked 111. that's not good. far right, guys, i sent a thank you from out here on my lovely perch. >> clayton: since when is sitting at the thing considered hunting? >> alysin: will get to the bottom of that. >> this little boy did not want to go to church. so seven-year-old decided just to take off driving a car away. and he joins us live with his side of the story. the. >> clayton: constant crying cann drive you crazy, i know, but we now know the cause of colic and how it can be cured. not only in babies, but in co-hosts as well. >> alysin: this is huge. c-5, those are fighting words. >> clayton: i was referring to wreck it's what makes triscuit worth every bite. triscuit. weave some wonder.
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having to go in the middle of traffic and just starting and stopping. having to go in the middle of a ballgame and then not being able to go once i got there. and going at night. i thought i had a going problem. my doctor said i had a growing problem. it wasn't my bladder. my prostate was growing. i had an enlarging prostate that was causing my urinary symptoms. my doctor prescribed avodart. (announcer) over time, avodart actually shrinks the prostate and improves urinary symptoms. so i can go more easily when i need to go and go less often. (announcer) avodart is for men only. women should not take or handle avodart due to risk of a specific birth defect. do not donate blood until 6 months after stopping avodart. tell your doctor if you have liver disease. rarely sexual side effects, swelling or tenderness of the breasts can occur. only your health care provider can tell if symptoms are from an enlarged prostate and not a more serious
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condition like prostate cancer. so have regular exams. call your doctor today. avodart. help take care of your growing problem but now they have new areas where i can find the brands i use every day-- and save even more. so that's what they mean by unbeatable. save money. live better. walmart. you need listerine® whitening vibrant white™ rinse. the mouthwash that gets teeth four times whiter than the leading toothpaste. and kills bad breath germs. listerine® whitening vibrant white™. the 53, page one and one deaths in the united states. fifteen of those have been
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pregnant women. now health officials said pregnant women will be the first in my first wife, who shots when they become available this fall. *speaker20 here to explain as dr. jennifer waldon and a good structure of surgery. good morning, drive. >> good morning speech by the swine flu usually we hear about the elderly with the typical flu. what have pregnant women become the biggest risk area now with h1 and one. >> pregnant women are being hit hardest with this version of h1 and one by russ, because they relative minnow suppression turn pregnancy to protect the fetus. of all deaths, 15 of them been pregnant women related to respiratory problems like ammonia. elderly people are supposed to it throughout her life and show more resistance soon as the flu vaccine available and when will it be to maggots in its development stages. it should be available in october and november. we hope. pregnant women will go to the front of the line and then young
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people. healthcare workers, military workers in close quarters c. when one of the pregnant woman gets it before october check report, her doctor give him in her symptoms and get on the drug, for because competitions can be deadly. >> dave: millions of americans know about colic. they have apparently found the cause, which is some type of bacteria. which we hoped and they took your. tell us about that. >> researchers at the university of texas, houston, found in babies with colic had a higher consideration of a type of bacteria. it's a bacteria we all have on our skin and gut them in their colic. and since they didn't have as a diverse environmental floor and had higher concentrations of this, which caused spewed about some balls and i'm *speaker20 can we increase further crying to make it needs more study, but if we develop a good bacteria that can restore the normal environment of bacteria will find a cure for colic soon as the be life altering.
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>> it would be suing dave says these are medicine. how do blue m&ms care prowess is. >> ftse blue dye, which is found in blue m&ms is a directive of brilliant kludgy administered to rats with spinal cord injury. these rats after six weeks, developed the ability to walk with court ended back in front leg function as compared to those who didn't receive the blue dye and couldn't even hobble about the poor little things. so this is a very exciting new study about a relatively harmless dye that could potentially be used to treat spinal cord injuries in the future, because they've been researching this for years to one there is a strange side effect eating is to make a strange but harmless side effect in people and the animals turned blue through and they turned out. i think the five -- chocolate
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factory. >> alysin: it has to be done in moderation. >> in moderation. the blue dye goes away eventually. it is just washed out of the system survive, though i stuff my face with them you would not recommend people eat bags of blue m&ms. >> no, you're just going to game weight. this needs more years of study, and probably it would be injected into your veins, a certain type of this blue dye. see if i by local it on the m&ms. >> alysin: you're taking on a blue cast. thank you, dr. jennifer waldon. smack this is a car chase like you've never seen before. there was a seven-year-old kid behind the wheel leading cops on a wild ride. how does child or to drive like this? he joins us live. he is in our studio. >> dave: you have to see this. this is one way of getting vitamins and minerals. this is another. new total blueberry pomegranate cereal
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gives you 100% of the daily value of 12 essential vitamins and minerals. plus the bold new taste of blueberries and pomegranate with crispy whole grain flakes and crunchy oat clusters. total, a truly delicious way to get vitamins and minerals. how are you getting 100%? visit totalcereal.com and get a free sample. five co-workers are working from the road using a mifi, a mobile hotspot that provides up to five shared wifi connections. two are downloading the final final revised final presentation. - one just got an e-mail. - what?! - huh? - it's being revised again. the co-pilot is on mapquest. - ( rock music playing ) - and tom is streaming meeting psych-up music from meltedmetal.com.
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>> alysin: some new breaking details on this story. a central terminal building at la guardia airport has been shut down. this is a person is in police custody for possession of a suspicious package. the bomb squad was called in to check his bag. no actual bomb was found. the arrest happened at an american airlines terminal and will have more information for you plus video as it comes into our news are." clinton. >> clayton: at first glance it looks like the average police pursued on your screen or it was in the service.before. it said that speeding car that police are chasing as a child was just seven years old. that's right, preston scarborough was the boy behind the wheel. there he is. he says he wanted to skip church so he took his parents car for a spin. he and his family join us today. we have dan, melanie, preston and london all join us as one. for joining us is one. prestonwood looked at the video there.
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how in the world first of all did you learn to drive like that. >> i don't know. >> clayton: don't even have to press the gas pedal to do. just hopped in the car and took off to give. >> s. >> clayton: dan uri inside you heard sirens watching tv at the time. he did know was going on, you heard sirens on the street. tonight i heard sirens coming down the road and really -- i didn't know -- i thought it was him playing a video game or something like that. as they got closer and closer i realized they were real sirens. so he comes running downstairs and says that the cops are outside and i'm like really? there right in front of her house and i thought they were across the street, and as i'm coming up the stairs the cubs are banging on my door. i'm trying to find something to put on second answer the door, and in the coming backdoor that's how it happened. sieze your the cops came in. did you realize that police were chasing you? did you know, what was going on and you were speeding away from them? >> nods affirmatively. >> clayton: you are racing away
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from the cops because he didn't want to go to church? why not? >> because it's so long. speaker had think we all understand that. so you got the best way to do, it was to take the parents car so that when you guys couldn't go to church? >> yes. >> clayton: were you going to go to give. >> by summing lesson teacher. you are going to go swimming lessons as to the church. what would've happened if you're some teacher, so you pull up in a card? to get out for your subclass to give my called mom, right? mom you are asleep the whole time. how did you wake up and find out about this? >> dan came in and told me i didn't live at first. i yelled, shut up. and then he told me he said yeah, the cops are here. so i went out and it all became real. >> clayton: london, you are 13 years old preston and seven. you can't drive yet. you have to get your license or learner's permit in the next year. what did you think when you
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heard your little brother took the family covers them? >> i was really shocked. i didn't know what to think. it didn't seem real, it was so weird. >> clayton: are you planning on learning from preston about, how to drive? >> i don't think so. >> clayton: dan, do you think the punishment -- what did you do to preston. >> we grounded him and we took some video games away, and some tv privileges and things like that. and as much as this is a funny story now, that is only funny because it turned out like it did. that could have been tragic and for us. it wasn't really funny, until the end of this last week. >> clayton: preston, did you learn your lesson. do you think the punishment fix that's the crime. you think that's appropriate, t-mac gap. >> clayton: are your ticket are for spinning them? >> never. >> clayton: thank you guys. presto, we will see another six or seven years until you can drive? google called marriott and ready too. preston, dan, melody, london,
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thanks for joining us this morning. the stasi today, the type of entertainment. coming up, afghanistan sees its deadliest month. we will hear from lieutenant colonel ralph peters on what could be a change of strategy at. >> goodness for you if you are looking to trade in those clunkers. gas for klunkers has been extended. how much more money is going into this program. when we return. [ female announcer ] want color that shines all year long? spend 10 minutes a month with natural instincts. it's the healthier way to blend away gray how? it's antioxidant rich and ammonia-free. in fact, the more often you use it, the healthier your hair looks. natural instincts, it's all good. you all want to run your businesses more efficiently, so we've brought in a team of experts to help.
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>> good morning everyone,
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it's saturday, august 1st, 2009. we start with breaking news for you. there's a scare at one of the busiest airports in the country. the central terminal belding has been evacuated at laguardia airport. police have one man in custody as quote, acting crazy with a fake bomb. we have the latest details. wow. plus, congress is now in the business of telling private companies, you got it. >> got it. >> how much it pay employees. how lawmakers are taking aim at wall street in those multi-million dollar bonus paychecks. paychecks. >> in the cutthroat can have house business, new companies are looking for an em and this one may have found it. >> that's right, clunkers for coffee. . >> that's right. >> this is "fox & friends." wake up with us, wake up your friends. >> wake up us. it's it's "fox & friends."
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>> it is indeed. >> good morning everybody. thanks so much for joining us. >> i'm down here. >> great to see you. so, would it help all of you out there if every single thing you ever ate at a restaurant came with the calorie count, perhaps the fat content, sodium content on the side. or would it be such a bummer that you would stop eating anything, but broth. >> if you looked and you went into starbucks and you saw a muffin, 450 calories or the egg sandwich. 230 calories, what are you likely to do? that could be coming to a restaurant near you. we are going to talk about a weigh in, and talk about it coming up here. >> we start with the new york post, granted this morning, bonus clause, should the government be able to decide what executives on wall street make? should they be able to control their salaries, their bonuses? well, the house passed legislation that would allow for that. although the senate has not voted on this yet. >> right. >> the problem is, if you saw the investigation earlier in the week, nine banks accepted
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bailout money, paid out bonuses of a million dollars or more to 4800 employees. again, those are nine banks, all accepted bailout money. >> right, here is how it breaks it down. citigroup, a look at it now, 45 billion in tarp funds. lost 18 billion in profits and 730 employees bonuses of over a million bucks. >> a lot over. much, well over i should say a million dollars. in fact, at goldman sacks, remember, they took lots of tarp money as well. they gave out bonuses that doubled the amount of their profit for the year 2008. how the math works in that i will never know, but something sounds wrong with that. let's look at bank of america. they took 45 billion in tarp funds as well. their net income fell during 2008. from 14 billion to just 4 billion, yet, they gave 172 employees multi-million dollar bonuses. >> okay, so, the controversy
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comes down to, what should the government do? should they step in and limit what a capitalist society is able to make? if you run a company and did not accept federal bailout money and if you have as much money as you can and the congress is arguing, specifically bar northeast frank, but a lot of bipartisan votes on this, which is, look, all of this risky behavior that led to this in the fuhrs place led to this. and all of this risky behavior to make a profit for the executives is how we got into the mess in the first place. >> clearly, barney franks is taking advantage of the outrage over the bailed out banks. should the government be able to control pay at firms that did not accept bailout money? we report, you decide. that is a very controversial issue, guys. >> maybe they should just start with controlling the huge executive pay at the bailout firms, that would be nice because these exorbitant
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bonuses, it just doesn't make sense if the taxpayers are paying these guys. one of the arguments the banks have made, hey, this is because we have to keep our top talent. there are so many people now unemployed you can find other top talent. >> there are plenty of businessbanks out of businesses that have top talent. >> 237-185 is the vote. and they had bipartisan support. it wasn't straight down the middle. >> yeah, and then it also has two different components. the government would have more power to regulate pay, but gives the shareholders a voice, a vote ap in fact to change executive compensation although it's nonbinding vote. so it wouldn't ultimately carry that much weight, but it's nice that the shareholders would have a say in this. >> here is a sad story about
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the white house garden. michelle obama went outside in the back yard tilling the land and grow the organic garden and neighborhood kids were going to teach us to live off the land. it was a grate concept, an organic garden, they got bad news this week about their garden. >> blame it on the clinton administration. this is the beauty of this sorry, i it's pretty funny, which is michelle obama planting this, they discovered within the soil there is a toks elk sludge. where did the toxic sludge come from? from the spray on fertilizer. >> sewage manure. >> sewage sludge going on, a lat of farmers use this. there are high levels of lead as caroline shively reported earlier and this doesn't make it organic. >> we know this is a label these days. this is a common practice the sewage sludge fertilizers and
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or began elk-- organic foods have no benefits whatsoever. >> no. >> rhonda said no. >> the story was from a health perspective. there's no actual benefit. >> when you buy locally as opposed to nationally and save on fuel costs and if you're buying locally organic there's a difference there. >> and good luck getting sasha and malia to eat the vegetables now that they know it's sewage sludge. >> in the meantime, here are your headlines, we have breaking news for you, laguardia's airport, the amend terminal is evacuated after a man came into the terminal with a fake bomb in a bag. port authority police say the man approached security in the c concourse. it wasn't clear if the man made a threat, but security officials say he was quote, acting crazy. police say the device in the man's bag was a few batteries and wires and not dangerous
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and police are allowing people into the main terminal. joining us on the phone is kelly, a fox news employee, at the airport right now. kelly, what's the situation there? >> you know, it's actually, it's pretty chaotic, they evacuated everyone around six o'clock in the morning. we were out there until about ten minutes ago. so everyone was kind of sort of rushed back in, security lines are going to be long, but things are moving and i think everyone's happy to soon be back in the airport. >> kelly, did they tell you when they evacuated you that there were reports of a bomb? >> no, they didn't. you know everyone was very slow moving, they were at first, really no sense of urgency, but once the report that it might have been a become came through they rushed people out and you know, n.y.p.d., the bomb squad, everyone came through, at least it wasn't yesterday and raining. >> that's a good point. but what happened in laguardia
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ends up with a ripple effect around the country and delaying flights even in airports as far away as california. have any flights been able to land or take off in the past three hours? >> you know, actually i heard even flights that had already boarded this morning at 6, you know, got all the passengers off the planes, i think planes are starting to take off. i'm in the security line now so i assume, you know, traffic will resume, but everyone's kind of just, you know, kind of trying to get their security now. it's a bummer that you've been delayed for three hours, kelly. >> yes. >> thank goodness it wasn't anything serious or more serious or for real. good luck on your flight and join us this morning. >> thank you. >> she didn't make it to work this morning. >> that's right. meanwhile, here are your other headlines. health care reform steams ahead after democrats threaten to compromise, the house energy ap science committee narrowly passing a bill, setting up a showdown for next
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month. >> we pass add bill that shows we can bring together, conservatives, moderates and progressive democrats. we are going to need that coalition on the house floor and i feel confident that we'll pass a health care reform bill in the house when we come back in september. >> and the plan was passed after those fiscally conservative blue dogs and liberal democrats forge a compromise. some last minute changes including how much insurance can raise premiums and give the government the authority to negotiate with drug companies. five committee democrats and all committee republicans voted against this measure. this is no joke, from the state that brought you comedian and senator al franken. they're eating crow this morning. they isn't out a news report connected to the attack on tim pawlen pawlenty. it didn't link to this. a link to a chinese grandmother learning english
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curse words. it was provided by an outside research firm. >> stop it! you can't make that up. >> it's so funny. going to the video later if you want to listen to it outside of kid's ears. >> this is outstanding. all morning long we've asked for your titles for rod blagojevich's upcoming book, duty out september 8th, due out on amazon, slashed the price, the governor the truth behind the political scandal that continues to rock the nation. we know you can top it and some of you have. here are some titles you sent in, rachel on face book, 13.95, i ain't giving this away for nothing. >> the price is now $16. >> that's what he said for the senate for barack obama. >> i leak this from erin in tennessee, writes in "bedtime for blago". >> that's fantastic. >> "going, going gone, the governor" from rick in florida
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"mayor today, gone tomorrow". >> darin from florida "governorship for dummies", and "blah, blah, blah, blah blago". >> that's funny. >> creative "the liar, the witch and the hair do". >> that's pretty good. >> "the man, the myth the hair". >> the other story we have been following this morning is cash for clunkers. >> cash for clunkers. >> the clunkers for cash. the cluckers-- the cluckers, the clunkers for cash program. >> we know there will be additional 2 billion dollars because it was going off the chicken story. >> uh-huh, just go on. >> anyway, 2 billion dollars is now talked away the house approved it and senate to sign off on it, we could see adid he gossal-- additional 2 billion dollars for cash for clunkers. we asked to you send in your clunkers you've had and owned for years and look at this. >> bj in florida.
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>> oh, bj. >> look at this clunker. >> we should have had stipulations like the government. >> it has to be able to move. >> 1962 dodge lancer, that's takes the cake. >> this thing can move have you seen it on the road. >> new jersey, a 74 pontiac clunker, i think that's about 90 feet long. >> and here is one, ken from missouri, 1988 ford crown victoria. >> oh, classic. >> sweet ride. >> take a look at this, susan from massachusetts sent in the old caddy, that's sweet and that's a gas guzzler, but stylish. >> complete with leaves on the front. >> is that leaves or is that paint chipping. >> rust? >> hard to see. >> continue sending your clunker photos to us, friend friends@foxnews.com, we'll share them to you. >> first to rick reichmuth i'm sure had a clunker some point, ten, 20 years ago. >> i did, but my first car was
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a '66 mustang. >> that's cool. >> did you have a mullet? >> how many times? >> more than one. >> until recently. >> i'm going to read this so i get it right, but today there's 5,000 cyclists in the pan massachusetts challenge, riding 190 miles to raise for the farber cancer institute. the storm is gone and so beautiful conditions in massachusetts todayment tomorrow, late afternoon a thunderstorm and the ride should be done then. this is the front that brought the rain showers, behind the storm, the advisories gone. some across eastern kentucky and the other one towards the central plains and this one here bringing troubles today, in fact, it's crossing and more storms, thanks, guys. >> thank you. >> coming up on the show, july was the deadliest month for coalition forces sense the war in afghanistan. we're not hearing about it, media bias from the
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commander-in-chief? we'll take a look when we come back.
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>> more coalition soldiers died this past month in afghanistan than any other since 2001. but that story is a big varied. no one is talking about it. and president bush was in office during the war in iraq, the death count was front page news nearly every single day. >> joining us is lt. colonel ralph peters and new york post columnist, ralph, hi, nice to see you. >> hi, alison how are you doing. >> july was a particularly deadly month for our soldiers in afghanistan, why aren't we hearing about that? >> i think it's because it's bomb's war, and the media is
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very much in love with president obama. there are pro nouned problems, even to be fair, under bush, they're getting worse now. in afghanistan we don't have a strategy, never really did. alisyn, a strategy has clear goals and then you allocate the means to achieve those goals. i can't anybody in washington to tell me clearly whgoals we're trying to achieve, attainable and would benefit the united states. >> i'm sorry to interrupt, isn't it just to keep afghanistan from falling back into the happened of taliban and al-qaeda? >> well, that we could do with far fewer troops and by concentrating on our enemies, al-qaeda and their affiliates, but what we're really trying to do is change the culture of afghanistan. we're trying to nation build where there's no nation to build and this is a problem the administration has across the board. they don't try to see the world through the other guy's eyes. for instance, we think we know what's best for afghanistan. we know what the afghans
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should want. but you need to stop and say, hey, what do afghans really want? and we now have our terrific military, brave, dedicated officers, soldiers, marines and they're in the afghan villages and trying to persuade these afghan elders to trust the afghan government. but the-- our soldiers themselves don't trust the afghan government. so, what exactly are we selling? now, will the me be clear the taliban could never defeat us, but we can't stop afghans from being afghans so it's a stalemate. >> you said that we could do this with fewer troops. in fact, the general in charge in afghanistan is expected to ask for more troops in afghanistan. do you expect the white house to go along with at that strategy? >> i think the white house is in such utter confusion on this that i can't begin to predict what they'll do. general stanford crystal is very brave, capable, talented
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soldier, but when you give a soldier a mission they focus on achieving that mission and i think somebody needs to stay back and say okay, what's in it for us? it me the goal in afghanistan in the first place was to punish for running a motel for al-qaeda. al-qaeda is still our enemy and no one in washington can explain to me now pacifying a village in southern afghanistan deters arab terrorists from attacking america again. >> ralph, thank you joining us this morning. >> clayton, what's going on? you look like you're devouring some fast food. i didn't realize i was about to do live television. coming up, restaurants all over the country may be putting calorie counts on menus including places like mcdonald's and supposed to pinch t pinch obesity problem, is this too close to home? a delicious debate coming up. ♪ . my guys brush their teeth like they clean their room.
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>> welcome back to the big show. restaurants across the country may soon have to post nutriti nutritional labels on their menus by law. four states passed similar laws and it's required in the senate version of the health care bill thanks to ted kennedy. is the crusade against obesity too personal and too political? michael supports labels and against labels is justin wilson, a research research analyst for the center for consumer freedom. justin, start with you out there in d.c., good morning to you. >> good morning. >> why shouldn't we want to know how many calories are in our food when we go into a restaurant? >> let me be clear. know necessarily oppose all of the calorie labeling that
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exists? what i think we need to be clear, it doesn't take a ph.d. in nutrition to understand the difference between a bear claw and a pa banana, one is healthy and one is a treat. >> and i had both this morning. >> and brings up a point about personal responsibility about knowing, but it's not always as black and white, is it? >> no, it's not. there was a study in the american journal of public health and found that people when they went into restaurants with the unhealthy options, they actually underestimated by 600 calories how many calories were in it. so all this is is providing information. people can make the decisions themselves because sometimes they don't realize it. when they pass the laws here in new york city, and women start today realize that those low fat muffins were 600 calories, they were shocked and they moved to other products. >> it's healthy, certainly when i see the cards i have to admit. ap back to your point about
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personal responsibility, eric slosher in the fantastic book , mcdonald's advertising to children, and happy clown dancing around and children and parents don't know the calories have th calories in the burgers. >> mcdonald's and other chain restaurants provide it to anyone who asks. it's on the website and available as possible, but don't want to throw it in your face. sometimes, a burger should just be a burger and we should just be able to enjoy it guilt-free. the thing that troubles me so much about menu labeling, we're going head long into that policy without a shred of evident that suggests it's effective. in fact, two of the biggest and most senior researchers wrote an editorial in the journal of the american medical association suggesting that you know what, we don't have the evidence and we are going to do it, but a slew of people say there are unintended consequences and the one i'm most concerned about, the liability it creates for trial lawyers, in
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new york and other cities, the trial lawyers filed lawsuits against these restaurants and they say, well, we tested your food and it's got 6 more calories and you said it had. millions and millions, if not tens of hundred of millions of liability. >> that could open a pandora's box. is there information that how much this could actually curb obesity? it seems like people are starting to cite the statistics. do we know it works having calories on the menus? >> it only happened march of 2008, when new york city was the first place to do this. they've seen changes. for example, there's a sandwich chain here in new york called cosey's, as soon as the labeling law went into effect, they changed sandwich and lower calorie versions on and started selling wildly. and also, mcdonald's and denny's and dunkin' donuts they also came up with lower calorie versions and they sold more. so, this is just the market working and the market is
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supposed to work when there's information so you let the market make their own decisions. >> the market also works. we'll have to leave it there and see how it shakes out. people buy food, or they don't. they don't wan want it they don't buy it. google tracks your key strokes, tracks your e-mails and records your appointments. and putting your privacy at greater risk, we'll explain. first let's check with dave white with home depot, what he's working on. >> storage and organization, if i haven't told you before, the perfect do it your shelf-- just kidding-- project. i'll be back later. what's in a triscuit? simple ingredients like soft white winter wheat gathered together for 22 grams of whole grain goodness. it's what makes triscuit worth every bite. triscuit.
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weave some wonder.
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>> welcome back to "fox & friends." dave briggs clayton morris, alisyn camerota, thank you for spending your saturday morning with us. >> this is a little shocking. a little? >> we haven't heard anything for roseanne barr for a while. >> a decade? >> she called me a little while ago. >> she follows you on twitter. we haven't seen her out in the public for while and the sit com and famous national anthem. now at her request, she has asked to pose as hitler in the new photo shoot. yeah, she's staging her come back into the limelight in an
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eye popping, very provocative, i would say forehead slapping publicity stunt. she has a hitler mustache on, this is by the way for a jewish humor magazine, and she has a hitler mustache on, wears a swastika arm band, she's putting little cookies, at that are-- >> burnt cookies into the article. >> into an oven and this is her attempt at getting back into the limelight and attempt at humor? i understand she's a pro vok to tore, he get that. the national anthem, take a listen in you've forgotten ♪ the star spangled banner yet wave ♪ . >> that's enough, three seconds that have is enough. gep, this is for the jewish humor magazine and roseanne barr is of jewish heritage. does this offend you if you're
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jewish. >> offend you even if you're not jewish. >> i know, this drives me nuts about this. okay, does that-- shouldn't anyone else find it offensive, it's not as if hit remember just killed jews, there were a lot of other people that hitler was involved with killing. anytime n anyone makes fun of hitler-- >> how do you find comedy? >> i agree. roseanne barr, she was a funny stand-up comedian and her show was good, she had a good show, it was humorous, but these things, these efforts, is that funny? forget it-- is there something funny about this? >> if you look at the photos online, there's nothing funny about it. mel brooks makes fun of hitler in the producers and summertime, and springtime for hitler and the best way of him getting back at that, that feeling, to make fun of this
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guy, but. >> who is to say the 55-year-old says she will bring these cookies, she is burnt jew cookies to her 13-year-old son. you be the judge. what else is going on. >> i have the headlines for you, tell me what's happening at this hour, iran now confirming that it's arrested three american civilians and the americans were hiking in the kurdish region of iraq, and got lost and went into the iranian territory, shaun maxwell, shane bauer and sarah short and the u.s. embassy in baghdad is currently working on the case. meanwhile, trials start today for protesters and activists involved in iran's post election protests and they're charged with inciting public riots. >> we're learning that the wife of ponzi schemer bernie madoff owes uncle sam a lot of moneyment ruth madoff owes $600,000 in tax penalties and interest, and madoff will have to pay up. the new spending agreement allows her to spend money only
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on her cats and legal bills, as well a reasonable amount of living expenses. i'm not sure what that means for ruth madoff. controversy brewing at a new california espresso drive through. why? because the baristas are bikini clad. this will shock you, more men than women are going to the coffee shop. >> the beach, we're moving the beach closer to the people. >> i know exactly right where that is, i used to live there. you've gone there no doubt? >> bikinis they say is a big part of the business plan and the customers say the coffee is not bad. speaking of attractive women, gizelle b gisele bunchen is carrying hubby's tom brady's baby. the baby bump was air brushed to present her privacy
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according to the london fog coat campaign. they wanted a classic portrait. is this a classic portrait after woman in a rain coat? >> all i see is a rain coat. >> that's all? >> she's not wearing anything under it, sort of like a flasher. >> here is what bothers me about it, protect the image of a classic image of her, so you remove the baby bump, which is more authentic to what she's currently going through than the half nude photo of her in a rain coat. >> a big baby bump hanging outside of that rain coat, that also is an image that perhaps london fog would be confusing people with. >> okay. >> a big pregnant belly? >> critics call this digital plastic surgery. do you like the new trend? this is creating a completely different person for this ad. >> well, as long as you realize that the models are different people and we don't try to live up to their ideal image. >> oh, i don't know. >> and take camera one real fast and this is what i look
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li like. >> oh, you look like that standing up. >> digitally enhanced the camera added an extra 40 pounds to me. >> you don't really have the double chin. >> i don't have the extra pawn much and everything. >> that's digital plastic surgery. >> and shot we showed you previously of rick reichmuth outside probably ride ago four wheeler, doing some hunting, maybe both. what's up. >> and that's when bass pro shop comes back? >> it's playland on the plaza. >> what are you doing? >> i'm on an a.t.f. and duck calling things here i've been trying to practice in the city and i've been away from it too long. take a look at the weather, warming up, parts of the east, 71 degrees in new york receipt now and we'll be dealing with a much nicer day not nearly as humid as yesterday, tomorrow, the rain returns, however, and take a look at the satellite radar, the eastern seaboard, ones from the moves on out to
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bringing a few showers across parts of the outer banks and such and we'll see a few showers today across parts of the southeast, as that front stalls out across that area. and then the next storm is brewing across areas of wisconsin, stretching down across kansas and missouri and by this afternoon, the tail end is going to be bringings severe weather, the threat across parts of oklahoma and towards louisiana and parts of tennessee and kentucky is where we'll see the threat, maybe for an isolated tornado, certainly we are going to be seeing some strong winds and some hail out of some of these storms there. and some flooding because we've seen so much rain, especially, across parts of tennessee and arkansas for this week. temperature-wise, we've got a very warm one across parts of the southwest, and into the triple digits of course, again, but the pacific northwest, where all of the heat across much of this week is improving quite a bit. as you move forward to the temperatures for today. you can see the highs in seattle, towards the upper 80's. it's still well above your averages, but much improved,
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than that 103 today. tomorrow, you warm up a few addition additional degrees and i don't think we are getting back to the scorchers, nonetheless it's warm out there. aly, have you made it outside? >> i have, i'm right here, dave, you're here, ignore the quacking mallards because air going to show us how to get organized with storage techniques. >> it's that time of the year, right, heading back to school and everything. and gets' let organized. first thing you need to do figure out what you're going to keep, what you're going to donate to charity. which is always good. yeah. >> and what you're going to trash. >> i leak the purging. >> you i hahave to be brutally honest with you. if you haven't used it in a year or looked at it, get rid of it or give it to charity. >> and some of the storage units that are see through. >> and perfect for that, once you figure out what you're going to keep, organize it. we've got the gray rubbermaid
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tote, keeps things dust-free, dry. and find them for any situations, this is great for under the bed. wheels on it. >> great for old sweaters, shoes. et cetera. >> and winter clothes, put them in there. once you've done that. shelving is a great thing to have and flexibility is really the key here. what i want to show you is how easy it is, even for some of this vertical shelving that's adjustable. i've got a stud finder. first thing you want to do is find the stud or the wood hyped t behind the wall. you put it against the wall and push the button and see how it lights up, shows you where the wood is behind the wall so you can mount it on a sturdy surface. i'm going to let you help me. once you've done that, make sure everything is level and the drill is behind you, alisyn, i know how you like to operate heavy machinery. >> yes. >> be careful. >> in the right direction. >> be careful of your finger
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there, i'm going to watch out, go ahead. >> oh, oh! >> all right, push hard. there, you've got it there. >> don't i need protective eyeware for this? >> you should and we recommend that and also, when you've taken on a project like this, talk to the home depot representative that you work with and make sure you get everything you need when you go in, such as, you have a drill, you're going to want a stud finder, air going to want the right shelves and these come in different shelves and lengths and can hold up to a couple hundred pounds. that was pretty easy i must say. >> if you want some book shelf type shelves, good for garages and basements and they're simple to put together, notice there are no screws, nuts or bolts or anything, they all just lock together. we put these together in just a few minutes. >> that's cool. you don't need a drill. >> it's perfect. >> even i could do this. >> plus, you can condition figure them in different ways key penni--
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depending what you need. this is the same kit we put together horizontally, a work bench, change it around if you move into a new place or move into a new house. >> it's do it your shelf. >> exactly. >> a cornery, corner moment. >> an inexpensive shoe holder and a lot of people throw them away because they don't like them, but they work, if you don't have room in your closet. add them in a laundry room or a work room and store them for other things. >> ops, watch out. >> you hang it on the door, you don't have to drill anything out. >> you put them on the door and you're good to go. >> all kinds of great stories, the key is get everything together figure out what you're going to keep and look at it in categories, christmas
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decorations and tools and things and figure out the best way to store and come in and we'll find out exactly what you need. >> i'm going to need these, these are from your personal collection. for you, they're yours, they're yours. >> thank you for coming in, go to your home depot or great tips. >> she needs those for all those shoes. >> out of afghanistan, three u.s. troops why just killed in a roadside bombing. we will have the latest details straight ahead. >> and the guys from bass pro shops are set up outside. they are going to tell us about the fall and the classic hunting show in america. that's coming up. announcer: how 'bout a laundry day you can look forward to?
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goodbye horse pills. i've got it working for me. (announcer) elations. the new standard in joint health. so now we've turned her toffee into a business. my goal was to take an idea and make it happen. i'm janet long and i formed my toffee company through legalzoom. i never really thought i would make money doing what i love. robert shapiro: we created legalzoom to help people start their business and launch their dreams. go to legalzoom.com today and make your business dream a reality. at legalzoom.com we put the law on your side. and make your business dream a reality. geico's been saving people money and who doesn't want value for their dollar? been true since the day i made my first dollar. where is that dollar? i got it out to show you... uhh... was it rather old and wrinkly? yeah, you saw it?
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umm fancy a crisp? geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. >> well, i'm googling something right now. big brother or google brother. it's hard to tell the internet monster, monitors your key stroke, archives your e-mails and that's not all they do. >> the new operating system will take it to the next level and put your privacy at a greater risk, they're worried. the privacy and ceo, founder of representation.com. thanks for being here. what is google doing now that's worrisome? >> well, google's basically trying to defeat microsoft and kill it once and for all, that's the goal. building now what's called an operating system. operating system is a very fundamental piece of software, it's a backbone of software on
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which all of our other software runs so it's deeper and more substantial and it's reaching your computer than your g-mail, than your desk top software than your operating system on which you, i'm sorry, your word processing software, microsoft excel. it's your fundamental backbone of your operating system and google is trying to get into the market for the first time. the risk is that an operating system reaches all of the information in your computer and also the risk with google is that this operating system is going to operate in the cloud, which means that it's going to exist across lots and lots of different machines. now, the good news is that the privacy security for this in the end of the day will be much stronger because a lot of people are going to be building it over time the risk is that all your information, not just what they see on google, g-mail, not just your desk top, all the information for your browser will be visible to google. why is that a problem? >> here is the stereo we can
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imagine, if you're around the independent or e-mailing your friends or your doctor about let's say the topic of breast cancer, that could be very interesting, say, to insurance companies, insurance companies might figure out quite reasonably that if you're e-mailing people about breast cancer you might be at a higher risk of actually having breast cancer so with that information, if google actually leaks it or sells it, i am a not saying they're going to, but if that ever happens then you might not get insurance because the insurance company might figure out you're more likely to have breast cancer, that's the kind of risk. >> and let me jump in here, i think that's a big leap here, let me show people what we're talking about on the screen. this is my desk top and among the apps, we've got google's browser and working on google chrome os. google earth, google fps and google health and on and on, paps, google latitude, talk, reader, everything about us is talked about there. let me just ask and play
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devil's advocate. they're going to be targeting ads to me base on what's sent in my g-mail. isn't that capitalism at work. and for me seeing ads for panty hose i'm seeing things i might want to buy? >> i think it's capitalism and first of all, welcome it as a consumer. the difference between google and other companies is better at giving you ads. think about it this way, to play devil's advocate, the only they think between google in our imagination and say at&t and comcast, we trust google. the founders of google are still there. we basically trust the ethics of google. people are asked do they trust at&t and comcast, they might say no. comcast and at&t have the same information that google does because guess what, they own the pipe that goes into your house so they see the data that comes in and out your computer via the internet. the only difference is they're much older than google.
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the founders aren't at at&t and comcast anymore, they're run by business people, they've got a financial obligation to max out their income. the difference is again, the comcast and at&t, because we don't trust those companies on balance they're actually a little bit regulated in fact in some cases overregulated. google is just regulated, entering the yidea that companies that are new like google, and we trust the founders, is that how we want to run our society. >> we certainly want to know if the government has that information. we appreciate you joining us this morning, thanks for breaking it down. >> thanks, michael. >> the guys from boss pro shop are set up outside the studio and soon we'll be hunting things and there's a grizzly out there i'm going to try to bag. ♪ . oa! honey honey honey honey honey!
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okay... i mean... you can't... this isn't a stove, alright? i mean... what if i just walked into the kitchen and started making a salad? - that'd be weird. - right? i mean, look, there's a technique. - okay... - ( strikes match ) wow.
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>> we have breaking news for you right now out of afghanistan. three u.s. troops were just killed there in a roadside bombing. thousands of u.s. led forces as you know were conducting anti-taliban operations in the area where it happened. a french soldier also died in the attack. we will bring you more details as soon as they come into our news room. that now over to clayton and dave. >> thanks, alisyn. you might have to try hard to see me i'm camouflaged and clayton, the yellow tie gives me away. we're talking about the fall hunting classic, the greatest sale in the country august 7th through the 23rd. what am i sitting on? you can get this baby this month. the arctic cat. and tell me about it, wally,
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what is the advantage to this. i know i can't start it up, but tell me what this baby will do? >> i have one of these, four wheel drive independent suspension which makes the ride great. these things are called speed racks and there's all kind of attachments you can get. different boxes, you can put a boat case, a rifle case, a chain saw holder, all kinds of stuff, pin here, pin there. these are great vehicles, i use mine almost every day when i'm home. that will get you $6400. clayton, have you got there? >> wally come over here, tell us about this bad boy, cop on it? >> yeah, it's a work horse, this is something that's got a thousand pound payload. this is something that you would use for hunting or just around your farm or your property to do work. the cool thing about it right now, if you buy one of these during the fall hunting classic, it's a thousand dollars off the price right now and you get a $500 bass
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pro gift certificate. see, it's a pretty good deal. all right, this thing, what can i haul with this thing? you've got some leaves and stuff look back here. >> and i could have used one of theys around the yard. >> the bed dumps. >> it lifts up. >> corn, dirt, rocks. >> a thousand pounds whatever it is. >> yeah. >> wall, only to you would this be a compliment, wally, you smell like dirt. >> chicks dig it. i know you guys don't think so. this is a new product. >> you created. tell me about this. >> it's called two and one. what happened i went hunting in alaska. when you're hunting you want to cover your human scent. >> of course. >> so you smell like dirt. >> spray it on your hand a little bit. >> spray it all over him. >> anyway what i did. >> i can't smell myself. >> when i was alaska i was attacked by mosquitos. why don't they make something
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that covers your scent. this is the only insect repellent in one and covers your human scent. it cost, it smells like dirt and covers your scent. and in hunting that's important. >> it smells like mulch. that's, 7.99. the fall hunting classic, greatest hunting show in america. august 7th through the 23rd. 51 stores, check them out at bass pre-.com. >> where he where we going? i just drove up and we are going to show my shooting skills. >> oh, no. >> and you can't smell me, can't see me. back in a minute. you smell like dirt. or discover things you've only read about. get the gear to get it done at bass pro shops. like the body glove method life vest for only $19.94. and take 33% off all remaining towables.
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having to go in the middle of traffic and just starting and stopping. having to go in the middle of a ballgame and then not being able to go once i got there. and going at night. i thought i had a going problem. my doctor said i had a growing problem. it wasn't my bladder. my prostate was growing. i had an enlarging prostate that was causing my urinary symptoms. my doctor prescribed avodart. (announcer) over time, avodart actually shrinks the prostate and improves urinary symptoms. so i can go more easily when i need to go and go less often. (announcer) avodart is for men only. women should not take or handle avodart due to risk of a specific birth defect. do not donate blood until 6 months after stopping avodart. tell your doctor if you have liver disease. rarely sexual side effects, swelling or tenderness of the breasts can occur. only your health care provider can tell if symptoms are from an enlarged prostate and not a more serious condition like prostate cancer. so have regular exams. call your doctor today. avodart. help take care of your growing problem
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- oh, come on. - enough! you get half. and you get half. ( chirp ) team three, boathouse? ( chirp ) oh yeah. his and hers. - ( crowd gasps ) - ( chirp ) van gogh? ( chirp ) even steven. - ( chirp ) mansion? - ( chirp ) good to go. ( grunts ) timber! ( chirp ) boss? what do we do with the shih-tzu? - ( chirp ) joint custody. - dog: phew... announcer: get work done now. communicate in less than a second with nextel direct connect. only on the now network. deaf, hard of hearing and people with speech disabilities access www.sprintrelay.com. hi, may i help you? yes, i hear progressive has lots of discounts on car insurance. can i get in on that? are you a safe driver? yes. discount! do you own a home? yes. discount! are you going to buy online? yes! discount! isn't getting discounts great? yes! there's no discount for agreeing with me. yeah, i got carried away. happens to me all the time. helping you save money -- now, that's progressive. call or click today.
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>> welcome back to the big show. this is the end of the show. >> thanks, ill a need that. >> thank our friends from bass pro shop. the august classic, and 51 stores. thank you for, wally. >> thank you. >> wally, do you think there's a sarah palin resemblance. >> i think, know, off road >> i think, know, off road driving in my 4 by 4? captioned by closed captioning services, inc. . >> let's go, guys, hop on, i've got everything i need. >> there's nothing more sexier than a girl with a gun. and a rig like .

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